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May 13 2026FINANCE

The Hidden Cost of Manual Work in Finance Teams

Finance teams often seem busy, but busyness doesn’t always mean they’re getting important work done. Surprisingly, most finance leaders admit their teams waste hours on repetitive tasks like typing numbers into spreadsheets or matching transactions by hand instead of focusing on big-picture planning

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May 13 2026POLITICS

Georgia’s Political Storm: What Abrams’ Subpoena Means for Fair Elections

Georgia’s political scene is heating up again, this time with a major legal twist. A state Senate committee has just sent out subpoenas for Stacey Abrams and two top leaders from the New Georgia Project, a group Abrams started back in 2013. Their job? To explain their roles in a big campaign finance

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May 13 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Behind the scenes of Hollywood: A family’s food fight against chaos

A reality show has taken a fresh bite out of Hollywood’s usual behind-the-scenes drama. Instead of gossip about A-list actors or director meltdowns, this one zooms in on the real MVPs—the people feeding entire film crews every day. The family at the heart of it has cooked meals across icy northern O

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May 13 2026CRIME

The Life and Case of Betty Broderick

Betty Broderick spent most of her adult life behind bars. She was 78 when she died in May 2024. Her story became famous not just because of the crime she was convicted of, but because it touched on themes many people find hard to ignore: love turning sour, betrayal, and the blurred line between vict

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May 13 2026SPORTS

Big Man Back, Series Heats Up: What the Spurs-Wolves Game 5 Means for Both Teams

Game 5 of the Spurs vs. Timberwolves playoff series isn’t just another match—it’s a high-stakes showdown where everything changes because one player stays on the court instead of sitting on the bench. Victor Wembanyama, the Spurs’ towering rookie, got thrown out of Sunday’s game for a hard elbow to

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May 13 2026ENTERTAINMENT

New TV Plans for 2026: What’s Changing on Hispanic Screens?

Next year, Hispanic viewers in the U. S. and Mexico will see big changes in what they watch. A popular host known for decades of TV is coming back after a long break. The same company is also bringing in major sports events, adding new shows, and expanding a streaming service. But why now? Some say

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May 13 2026POLITICS

Maine's race gets a surprise twist – time for a three-way debate?

Last week in Maine, a planned political debate hit a sudden roadblock when one candidate dropped out. Governor Janet Mills pulled back just days before the event was set to begin. Then, shortly after, her main opponent Graham Platner decided not to step in without her. The debate vanished overnight,

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May 13 2026SPORTS

Nate Diaz blasts fake fight drama in MMA

MMA fans often see fighters pretend to hate each other before a match—talking tough, trash-talking, even throwing fake punches at press events. But Nate Diaz made it clear he finds that kind of pre-fight show boring and unnecessary. Speaking recently with Mike Perry, Diaz called out Sean Strickland

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May 13 2026TECHNOLOGY

Smart Drug Delivery: A New Focus on Light-Based Cancer Treatment

Light-activated cancer treatments sound high-tech—and they are. Doctors use a special light-sensitive drug called a photosensitizer (PS) to destroy unhealthy cells. The trick isn’t just dumping in more light-sensitive molecules. Studies show where those molecules go inside the cell matters more than

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May 12 2026HEALTH

Staten Island trains workers to spot suicide and overdose risks at the same time

Staten Island is tackling two big problems—overdose deaths and suicide—by teaching frontline workers how to handle both at once. Around 300 people have already gone through a six-part training that mixes mental health and drug-use screening. The idea is to catch warning signs early, whether someone

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